Max Riegel

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rising rents were the flipside of rising food prices, caused by lack of good-quality agricultural land. More costly food increased the wages workers needed for subsistence. This growing wage share, Ricardo believed, put a squeeze on profits in other sectors such as manufacturing. As economic development proceeded, the profit rate–basically the manufacturing capitalist’s return on capital–would fall. The profit share–the part of the national income going to capitalists–would also fall. Correspondingly, the wage share going to manufacturing workers would rise. But the extra wages would have to ...more
The Value of Everything: Making and Taking in the Global Economy
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